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- <text id=94TT0071>
- <title>
- Jan. 24, 1994: Bear Hugs All Around
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 24, 1994 Ice Follies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DIPLOMACY, Page 38
- Bear Hugs All Around
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In the wake of Clinton's saxophone summitry, his advisers claim
- that everyone came away happy. But the President's work may
- have only just begun.
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by David Aikman and James Carney with Clinton, with
- other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> The President of the U.S. traveled through the snows of Moscow
- to the dacha where an empire had been unmade. The sumptuous
- three-story house is called Novo Ugaryevo, and it was there
- in April 1991 that Mikhail Gorbachev negotiated the far-ranging
- reforms that four months later triggered the coup against him:
- the coup that brought on the Russian revolution that wiped away
- the Soviet Union and brought to power Bill Clinton's host, Boris
- Yeltsin. Last week, as trees and fencing glowed with lights
- marking the Russian new year, saxophone music floated out of
- Novo Ugaryevo.
- </p>
- <p> The American President had already practiced saxophone diplomacy
- twice before on his trip: once when he accepted a gift sax during
- the NATO summit in Brussels and then at a jazz club in Prague.
- The Russians handed him a third opportunity. Midway through
- an "informal" 22-dish dinner that included moose lips ("This
- was not a chocolate dessert," joked an American official), Yeltsin
- gave the President a five-inch blue-and-white porcelain figure
- of Clinton, one hand waving and the other clutching a saxophone.
- Suddenly--but to no one's surprise--a real one appeared,
- and Clinton rose to the occasion, performing My Funny Valentine
- and, in spite of the season, Summertime.
- </p>
- <p> With the White House awash in Whitewater, Clinton reveled in
- his chance to conquer new worlds, to prove that a self-described
- "domestic" President could hold his own in the complex realm
- of international politics. He brought his genial man-of-the-people
- act to the streets of Brussels, Prague, Moscow and Minsk, even
- as he tackled economic and security issues from Russia to Bosnia
- with wonkish concentration. Boasting of breakthroughs on Ukrainian
- nuclear arms and the detargeting of Russian missiles, Clinton
- proclaimed his trip a success. Said a senior official traveling
- with the President: "We absolutely did everything and got everything
- we hoped for." But while music hath charms, Clinton's work on
- the international front may be just beginning.
- </p>
- <p> The foremost issue was Russia. At meetings with NATO partners
- in Brussels and with Central European leaders in Prague, the
- same worries emerged over and over. Would Russia backslide from
- reform and closer ties with the West? Would it reclaim its old
- sphere of influence in Central Europe? Indeed, Yeltsin looked
- with dismay at attempts of former East-bloc nations to join
- NATO. Why should they want to join? "Russia does not threaten
- any country in Central or Eastern Europe," he told TIME.
- </p>
- <p> As Clinton and his senior aides rode from their hotel to the
- Kremlin for their first round of talks, they wondered whether
- they would find Yeltsin firmly on course for more economic reforms
- or possibly planning to trim under pressure from the extreme
- nationalists and communists in the newly elected parliament.
- In political shorthand, the apprehension had a name: Vladimir
- Zhirinovsky, the most visible and loudest of Moscow's band of
- neofascists. But Clinton was more broadly concerned last week
- with resentment among the Russian people and with whether Yeltsin
- would have to respond by firing some of the best-known reformers
- from his Cabinet and by slowing down the transition to a free-market
- economy.
- </p>
- <p> Almost as soon as they sat down in the Kremlin, Yeltsin reassured
- them, saying, "There has been no backpedaling. We will continue
- to go steadily ahead and in some areas may intensify reform."
- The Americans received that pledge, said one, "with an audible
- sigh of relief." The Russian President went on to describe the
- state of Russia's economy and so did several ministers. Their
- presentations lasted 50 minutes, and though some eyes glazed
- over, Clinton's didn't. He listened attentively to each minister
- and jotted down pages of notes.
- </p>
- <p> In scenes reminiscent of his election campaign, Clinton took
- to the streets of Moscow selling Yeltsin's reforms, going so
- far as to answer questions from Russians in a televised town-hall
- meeting. At times the performances on the street and on the
- air made his advisers edgy. "In things like this, there are
- a lot of difficult issues where language matters a lot, where
- it's a lot easier to have a script," said a U.S. official.
- </p>
- <p> The view that Russia has become a puppet of the U.S. has helped
- fuel nationalist sentiments among the likes of Zhirinovsky.
- Still, the head of the Liberal Democrats professed no interest
- in Clinton's visit. "It's not important to us," he told TIME.
- He was apparently busy. At last week's opening sessions of the
- Duma, the lower house of parliament, Zhirinovsky got into a
- slapping match with a fellow legislator at the parliament cafeteria.
- They were arguing over who should be served first.
- </p>
- <p> The capstone to the trip, and to months of painstaking U.S.
- diplomacy, was Ukrainian President Leonid Kravchuk's agreement
- to dismantle all 175 of the intercontinental missiles and more
- than 1,800 nuclear warheads left behind in Ukraine when the
- Soviet Union collapsed. At a brief stopover at the airport in
- Kiev, Clinton joined Kravchuk for a press conference in front
- of a blue curtain hastily hauled up from a snack bar. Kravchuk
- had made the same promise before, only to be stymied by the
- Ukrainian parliament. But he flew to Moscow to join Clinton
- and Yeltsin in putting his signature to the written agreement.
- At the same time, Yeltsin and Clinton dramatized the message
- that the U.S. and Russia are no longer enemies. They announced
- that as of May 30 their strategic missile systems will no longer
- be aimed at each other or at any other country.
- </p>
- <p> A senior American official says the only thing more difficult
- than dealing with Russians or Ukrainians is "dealing with both
- of them at the same time." The hardest part, he says, "was getting
- the Ukrainians to be realistic about what to expect from us.
- They were thinking of billions in compensation when we were
- thinking hundreds of millions." Washington officials cannot
- be sure Kravchuk will deliver this time either, but they hope
- he will be able to sell his parliament on accepting pledges
- of more than $300 million in aid, Russian and U.S. security
- guarantees, and up to $1 billion worth of fuel for peaceful
- nuclear programs. The most potent weapons must be deactivated
- within 10 months; beyond that the timetable remains secret and
- U.S. officials hope the warheads can be removed from the most
- modern and threatening missiles before a recalcitrant parliament
- in Kiev might be able to intervene.
- </p>
- <p> Integrating the East bloc into the Western military alliance
- remains an open question. Russia looks askance at applications
- to NATO by the leaders of Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary
- and Slovakia, and Lithuania as well, all of whom have been invoking
- the dread name Zhirinovsky and the shadow of Russian nationalism.
- In Brussels, Clinton won unanimous approval from NATO representatives,
- loath to defend a slew of new members, for his Partnership for
- Peace. It allows new applicants to join in alliance military
- exercises and training without firm guarantees on when they
- might win full membership. Polish President Lech Walesa was
- particularly displeased at what he saw as a Belgian waffle.
- Even so, he and the others signed on when Clinton arrived to
- talk it over with them in Prague.
- </p>
- <p> In an interview with TIME, Yeltsin was diplomatic but negative
- about expanding NATO. "We not only do not regard NATO as hostile
- to Russia," he said, "we do not even rule out the possibility
- that we might join it at some stage." But he then went on to
- warn that the "hasty entry" of some countries into NATO would
- "create a feeling of isolation in others" and "play into the
- hands of nationalists." At a joint press conference with Clinton
- on Friday, Yeltsin went further, arguing that if NATO is to
- take in new members it should accept Russia and the former Warsaw
- Pact states simultaneously. "Admitting us one by one is no good,"
- he said. "I am against that."
- </p>
- <p> Secretary of State Warren Christopher told TIME that Russia
- would join the Partnership for Peace--and someday might even
- join NATO. Integrating "all of Europe in one fell swoop" was
- an attractive concept, he said, but when Yeltsin spoke in those
- terms he was "defining a kind of Utopia."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's last appointment in Europe shaped up to be his most
- difficult and potentially least fruitful. He was to fly to Geneva
- on Sunday for talks with Syrian President Hafez Assad aimed
- at getting the Middle East peace process moving again. Clinton
- will, says Christopher, "let Assad know of our desire for a
- comprehensive peace." For his part, Assad will be looking for
- assurances that Clinton is ready to put some of his own time
- and effort into the process. It is not known whether the Syrian
- President appreciates the saxophone.
- </p>
- <p> For all his exertions in foreign lands, Clinton was preoccupied
- with thoughts of home--especially of family. At 3 a.m. Thursday,
- hours before his first meeting with Yeltsin, Clinton stood in
- the hallway of his Moscow hotel, talking with his senior aides
- about his mother, Virginia Kelley, who died three days before
- he left for Europe. He had been mourning her throughout the
- trip. Clinton carried several chapters of the unpublished manuscript
- of her memoirs with him to Moscow. The President, says a White
- House staff member, "has effectively become the editor of her
- autobiography." In the hotel hall he was telling senior officials
- stories from its pages. Later that day, Clinton made an unscheduled
- stop at a newly rebuilt church near Red Square. A priest showed
- him to a corner. "I was looking for a place where I could say
- a prayer for my mother," he told one of his aides. The President
- lit a candle and, for a few moments, stood contemplating the
- flames that illuminated an Orthodox crucifix.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-